Wednesday, 17 December 2014

Hitch-hiking

This feels great, being out on the open road again. Hitch-hiking. Haven’t done this for what, twenty-five years? Wasn’t sure you still could. Feels great though. Like salvation. I’d been feeling that my very soul was screaming for release. Fifty-two years old and still I don’t feel settled – far from it. Every day, attending the office, dealing with people’s problems. I barely like people enough to say hello to them at a bus stop, never mind dealing with their interminable problems.

Fifty-two years old, jobless and hitch-hiking. Heading south. When drivers ask my destination I just say ‘London’. Everything heads toward London it seems. London or thereabouts. Like a great maw, it gathers everyone up, then maybe it spits a few back out. It holds no novelty for me, I’ve lived there on and off over the last near forty years. Moving away and then moving back. Now I seem to be drawn to it again, leaving another past behind.

The open road is where I really want to be though. I don’t want to arrive, the travelling is the buzz. It’s when you arrive that things have to be arranged. Somewhere to live, a job to do, a dole office to visit. The shitty things of life. I wonder if it’s possible to just keep on travelling.

Mind you, I’m no Bear Grylls. First sign of discomfort and I’m distinctly discombobulated. This ‘freedom’ thing is great as long as the weather is clement and there’s food enough to eat. Wouldn’t take very much for me just not to be arsed with it at all. I guess I’m now technically homeless. A liberating thought at the same time as being a terrifying one.

I’m not a very brave person, but a restless one; endlessly restless, like some callow animal that can’t be calmed. Easily startled like an old deer left to fend for itself. I’ve run away this time due to the same old feeling of being trapped. Bit late in the day to be feeling this way I know, but there we have it. It’s done now. Bridges have once again been burned.

Got a lift from a Christian guy earlier on. He told me that Jesus had told him to take me fifty miles further than he was going, so he had. Glibly I told him to ‘thank Jesus very much for me, tell him I’m much obliged’ but he took it in good stead. We had that sort of relationship by then. I could be jokey and kind of smart-arsey with him: he wasn't a bad sort. He did though sort of insist that I listen to him sing some songs he’d written about his relationship with Jesus. We ended up on a sort of lay-by outside Rochdale with him banging out these songs on his guitar. I experienced a sort of pleasant ‘displacement’; as if I was looking down on myself in the middle of this somewhat comical scene. Had I been a less mature individual I may have burst out laughing, but I respected the man’s commitment to his faith. Maybe there was a lesson here for me.

It reminded me that it was quite a common thing in the hitch-hiking game for born-again types to pick you up. Captive audience I guess.

Ex-servicemen too. Want to tell you their war stories. Tell you all about the camaraderie they missed. Ex-servicemen can be very lonely types.

I got a lift once from a truck-driver who was a great lover of ball-room dancing; he had all his glitzy duds hanging in the back of his cab. Wherever he ended up of a night he’d visit the local Palais de Dance and away he’d go. Said it was a great way to ‘pick up the ladies’. Not a bad life eh? Out on the open road all day, then smooching the night away. Good on him.

Stuck at this service station a good two hours now and twilight is setting in. I’ve got my sleeping bag with me and I may have to bed down in this imitation woods affair (feeble attempt to blend in rustically with the surrounding countryside). Service stations can be the loneliest places in the world when you’re hitch-hiking; a bit like train station bars, the population is essentially transient. Strangers who will never meet again. They’re also fantastically expensive. You get the feeling that someone blind-folded sticks a pin in some price-tags of a morning and aims towards the high end. 

‘Fish and Chips – twelve quid. That’ll do!’

It doesn't do to have to face yourself when you’re running away, sort of defeats the purpose. I’m even risking walking along the grass verge beside the hard shoulder to avoid introspection. This is of course not legal but I seem to have gone beyond such considerations in my determination to keep on the move.

I swear I once got a lift from a truck-driver who had me and another bloke sat on the small ledge between his cab and his load. The wind was so strong that it matted my hair into knots. Hard to believe that actually happened.

Once also got a lift from a lorry-driver who took the concept of ‘drink-driving’ somewhat literally as he performed both functions at the same time – half bottle of Bell’s in one hand, steering wheel in the other. In true Glaswegian tradition he ascertained that my favoured football team was not the same one as his and promptly bid me leave the vehicle in a dark Cumbrian wilderness where I attempted to sleep in the eaves of a motorway bridge.

You have to be tough to be itinerant; tough and very resilient. It’s not an easy game. The rat race tends to create the conditions under which the socially disenfranchised are created and then openly despises them for becoming such. ‘Criminalisation’ is a subjective process. Look at the prison system in America (and, pretty soon, here in the UK) where it’s run for private profit. What does such a system depend on to turn a coin?

Prisoners!!

Simple supply and demand. Not enough prisoners? Create more crimes.

They say the saviour of the construction industry in the U.S. has been the building of prisons; big fuck-off super-prisons the size of towns.

Go figure.

Hitch-hiking is, of course, illegal.

Why is it illegal?

Walking up the grass verge gets you nowhere and is a pointless exercise. Firstly; it’s taking you away from a service station where a lift is more likely to be secured (car-drivers won’t stop on the hard shoulder to pick you up, for fear that they themselves may be pulled up by the police) and, secondly; how far are you going to walk? Thirty miles to the next service station? All the way to London?

As I say, I’m doing it to escape myself and my own thoughts. There are voices ready to scream in my head. The principle one is a hard and shrieky ‘What have you done?’ and it’s followed closely by a dismayed and distressed ‘What are you doing?’ These questions need avoiding and are now, anyway, largely redundant. ‘What’s done is done, please give me some peace’ is a voice I’m trying to bring to the fore but it has a tendency to be overpowered, hence the walking.

Walking in the dark night under the glare of motorway lights, cars and lorries zooming by. Maybe some drivers glance over at this lonesome figure trudging through the unkempt grass, probably guessing it’s the driver of a broken-down car trying to reach a phone (do people still have to reach phones these days?). It gets a bit scary out here. I remember watching a really bizarre TV programme about two Scandinavian twins simultaneously running out in front of traffic on the M6 (they’d travelled over from Ireland to add further incongruity to the tale). One managed to get herself badly smashed by a truck and the other sustained an injury but not severe enough that she couldn’t assault and attack the motorway police who were trying to help her. This was all caught on camera and made for quite distressing viewing. One of those things that stays with you. The police-assaulter was taken into custody and released a couple of days later when she went out and murdered some poor fella with a knife.

‘Folie a deux’ – a moment of madness between two twins was one of the psychiatric summations at the trial.

Certainly takes some powerful motive force to compel someone to throw themselves into speeding traffic. A powerful force indeed.


I remember once, to amuse myself, I adopted a broad ‘Ulster’ accent when accepting a lift from a chap who, on first impressions, appeared to be middle-class and English. Turned out he was a native of Belfast. The more I tried to prove my mettle as a countryman of his the more I started speaking like Ian Paisley. I very quickly told him that I had to shorten my proposed destination as I was feeling car sick.

Monday, 15 December 2014

Paddling Man

He was a conspicuously disconsolate beach-walker. Couples from way up on the prom would point him out. One would say to the other ‘look at that man. Doesn’t he look disconsolate?’

He seemed unaware of the impression he was making and apparently oblivious of the fact that he was walking knee-deep in freezing water.

If you’d have been close enough to him – and nobody was – you would have heard him muttering.

Donna Trump (she cursed the fact that her parents were unaware of the names of American tycoons) watched the lonely figure as she sat in the Pavilion seats. She watched and thought of the word ‘shambolic’. She also considered the word ‘nutter’. ‘His trousers and shoes will be wringing wet’ was what she said to her dog, Foley. Foley just looked at her wantonly, wondering if there were any more Cheesy Wotsits coming her way. Dogs only thought in terms of food and affection; and the affection was often just an affectation to procure more food ‘Good doggie!’ was usually followed by a treat or a morsel or two.

Donna was quite cosy in her big furry boots and woollen coat. Her top half looked like it was made of scarves with just her pretty face peeking out. She’d knitted her mittens herself, also her bobbly hat, which was blue and green. She loved the winter because she loved dressing this way. She felt great defeating the elements; being cosy in the cold.

She guessed that the paddling man didn’t share this particular satisfaction.

‘Someone should have a word with that man’ she proclaimed to Foley, who’s long pink tongue and hungry panting gave the impression that she hadn’t eaten in weeks and was now on the point of collapse from starvation. Her huge canine eyes pleaded for sustenance. She cared not a jot about any man walking about the sea in his trousers. Donna wished that someone would indeed intervene, she just didn’t want it to be her. This was a peaceful, respectable seaside town but who knew where nutters lurked? Still, there was hardly anyone else around. She decided to give Foley another run. Dogs also run: they chase about after sticks and balls, but only on the understanding that there is food laid down sometime soon. Have you ever seen a dog sulk? They’re the greatest sulkers in the world. They sulk and they huff and they lay their heads lower than snakes and their big brown eyes look like they may have tears in them. Do dogs cry? You bet they do. They cry because there’s food available and you, for some inexplicable reason, are not giving it to them.

So, Foley ran and Donna Trump followed. She kept one eye on her dog and one eye on the crazy man. She wondered what could make a man so crazy as to walk fully-clothed in the freezing sea. ‘Probably a woman’ was her first thought, then wondered guiltily if she was betraying her feminist sensibilities. Part of her, she had to admit, liked to see men suffer. God knows they’d made women suffer enough over the years. ‘Smash the patriarchy!’ was still banner-sized in her heart. Why then did she presume that this man’s evident unhappiness could/ would be due to the contribution of one of her own gender? Maybe he was gay. Maybe it was another man he was grieving over. Maybe he’d fallen out with a brother or a sister. Or a father, or a friend. Hell! Maybe he’d just fallen out with himself?

She was intrigued now.

She remembered her mother and father when they weren't talking. Sometimes they wouldn't talk for days and weeks. They lived in a nice, big detached house in Freshfield, a leafy suburb of Liverpool. She watched her father digging the garden, planting his roses (he said his roses were full of salt due to the nearby Irish Sea). He’d spend hours out there, long past dusk. He’d become absorbed in his work, she believed that, but she also knew that his prime motive was to be anywhere that her mother wasn’t. It was a tacit agreement between them in these periods of Cold War that he’d be outside while she fussed and footered around the house. If the weather was bad, then he’d go to his shed to sharpen tools or make wine which always tasted like Madeira. He could turn his hand to anything except how to get along with his wife. It was no great surprise, but still no less shock, when it finally came out that he was seeing a woman in Barrow-in-Furness.

Donna thought no less of him for that. In fact, it made her smile. At least there was a bit of manly fun in his life. And the woman in Barrow-in-Furness (Sue? Sheila?) must have got the benefit of all the pent-up lust, all the sensual deprivation. She must have been lit up like a Christmas candle walking around the High Street shops.

Her mother wasn't really much fazed, not after the initial shock to her sense of respectability any road, it just gave her more power over him and he spent even more time in the garden.

Donna grew up on the coast, she couldn't imagine living inland, but now she lived on the east coast. She’d moved to Edinburgh for her studies and had settled here in Portobello. ‘Edinburgh’s Seaside’ it said on the sign on the way in, and she’d grown proud of the little town. It had a good mixture of authentic Edinburgh working class and the twee middle class folk necessary to staff the craft fairs and farmer’s markets. The proliferation of ‘southern’ English voices made Donna consciously more Scouse in an attempt to differentiate herself. She knew the Scots deep down hated the posh English accent. This posed problems if she ever bumped into any proper Scousers who would see through her pose in an instance. Happily this didn't happen too often in the Halls of Academe where she plied her trade as a Philosophy lecturer at Napier University.

She watched Foley bound toward a woman with a young child and shouted him back from her lunging attack. Some of the locals wanted dogs banned from the beach altogether. They said that owners didn't always pick up their shit. They said that some folk were uncomfortable with dog’s breenging around enthusiastically. Some wanted the beach segregated ‘Apartheid’ style with dogs only allowed on certain sections. Some people, she thought, had too little to worry about. Two miles up the road in Niddrie folk were getting sanctioned to buggery by the dole and no-one down here turned a hair. Find a dog-turd on the beach and some were screaming blue murder.

Even though not a proper Scouser she found herself bristling at the rank snobbery of some folk. The type of folk that demanded the local Scotmid stock Brasciatta.

The paddling man had flounced off far into the distance, though she could still see his arms gesticulating some sort of personal hell or fury. She thought of the word ‘chillblanes’ and wondered why its usage seemed to have disappeared. Did people not still get them? What were they anyway? They were caused by the cold and manifested themselves around the ankle area. A chill on the blane? What the hell was a blane?

Whatever they were, be-trousered paddling man was favourite to get them. Also double-pneumonia and hypothermia. Never mind the flu and a cold from hell.

She wondered again at the possible causes of his behaviour. Maybe he’d lost his job or been one number off the Euromillions. Maybe his wife was from Barrow-in-Furness. Maybe he’d been told he only had months to live. Maybe he was a passionate, if lone, anti-fracking campaigner. They’d been going nuts about that around here too. Soon as they realised it may devalue their property they were up-in-arms. They’ll put up with almost anything other than that your middle-classes (of which group, she had to keep reminding herself, she was very definitely one), except maybe the price of fuel. Ruin the NHS, scapegoat the poor – that’s OK! Just don’t threaten our cars or our houses. No wonder British politics had got so myopic. Christ! Even the French throw a few cobble-stones from time to time, just to show there’s even just a glimmer of a light of rebellion. Brits just take it up the arse then beg for more.

They didn't even have the guts to be openly racist and xenophobic, had to hide behind the coat tails of Farage and his gang of gin-soaked old ruins and baldy thugs from Essex and Kent.

Gesticulating, paddling man was on the way back. Even he baulked at reaching the sewage works up towards Leith. Heading back down toward the gentile Joppa shores, kicking at the water now and almost losing his balance among the strengthening waves. He certainly wasn't calming down any that’s for sure. Maybe he’d build himself up into such a frenzy that he’d end up thrashing about in the water like a beached fish bucking and twisting in the foam. Maybe he’d just take a flying header into the briny and the flame of his fury would singe like a chip-pan in a sink. He’d stand up erect and stride towards home all figured-out and ready for a warm bath and a change of clothes.

There was an elderly couple on the prom outside the baths. The husband was pointing at paddling man and the wife was shaking her head in semi-horrified wonder. No-one really knew what to do about nutters except of course, stay well out of their road (unless you were a nutter too, then there were no rules at all). At least, we assume that paddling man falls under the category of ‘nutter’. We don’t know why he’s up to his chino’d thighs in salt water but still we assume that, whatever it is, the normal or appropriate response is not to go charging along the seafront in December thrashing through the cold sea still wearing your shoes.

You wouldn't find the Masonic Order behaving in this way!

Maybe he’s foreign. Maybe this is what foreigner’s do. Maybe he’s from some land-locked eastern European shit-hole and he can’t believe he has all this sea to play with.

Maybe he doesn't know the rules of paddling. Does anyone else paddle except the Brits? Maybe someone’s told him about paddling and assumed he’d know to take of his shoes and socks, then roll his trousers up (at least if he was a Mason he’d have at least one trouser-leg rolled up).

This might be one crazy Slovakian paddling son-of-bitch…

Not so long ago this type of behaviour would have gained you entrance into one of the many ‘loonie-bins’ that existed in our fair land. Now you had to pay to get into them. Similarly, in 1970s British sit-coms (‘Only When I Laugh’ being at the same time, the best and the worst of them) as well as Carry-On movies involving hospitals, the joke was that the doctor wouldn't let you out of the damn place. ‘When can I go home nurse?’ ‘Not until doctor has a good look at your prognosis!’ Oooo errr says Frankie Howerd making suggestive faces and Kenneth Connor going ‘cccoooorrrrrrr!’ as Babs Windsor bends over to administer thermometer and shoves her boobs into Sid James’ face.

This sea-striding bloke would have been straight-jacketed by now and banged up in a padded cell. He’d have been sectioned under the Aberrant Paddling Act of 1937 ‘not paying due attention to proper attire’. Nowadays he’s allowed to paddle about like this unmolested.

The sun was fading fast and paddling man showed no sign of letting up on his back and forth journey. 

Whatever the man’s troubles they had a way to run yet. Donna knew she wouldn’t approach this man however curious she was, and Philosophy lecturers had to be curious, otherwise what was the point?

What right did she have to interfere or intrude? If he wanted to talk to anyone he surely would. 

Maybe he was the healthiest one among us? Maybe one day soon there would be a procession of furious unconventionally-attired paddlers assaulting the sea with enraged foot swipes and punching at the sky?

Strangely, she knew this would be good.



Saturday, 29 November 2014

You are who you are

I was only nine and trying to protect my wee sister’s, now I’m the ‘bad yin’. I’d put a wee table thing over my wee month-old sibling and her four year old sister and cooried under it trying to block out his wrath. He was shouting and bawling as he usually did when he came home drunk but this time he seemed particularly furious. I never saw him actually hit my mother, and he never hit us or his son Dan who was the eldest (Dan, now twelve, was now old enough and wise enough to ensure he was out when these instances occurred) but he behaved as if he was on the very brink of violence. My mother was trying to keep him away from the bed but he seemed intent on reaching us for some reason, we seemed to be the focal point of his rage. How we’d dragged him down, ruined his life, the usual stuff but this time he was spitting and bright red with drink and fury.

He was, of course, too strong for my mother and he reached us and pulled our wee shelter away leaving us three wee lassies exposed to his anger, his voice loud and booming above us, pulling at the sheets around the wee new-born. I was the big sister and my only thought was that he was going to harm us, or one of us, in some way so I fled out the room, out the door and onto the lamp-lit Sauchihall Street. It would be about ten at night and quiet and I headed straight for the policeman’s box across the road. I didn't know what to call him except ‘Mister’ so I said the fateful words…

“Mister, my Dad’s gonnie hit us or kill us, please come and help..”

And that’s what made me the family scapegoat for the rest of time.

I was born in a castle in Bridge of Allan, Stirlingshire the same month the war started. It was also the week after my mother’s mother had died. I was the child of a grieving mother.

We were evacuated there from our home in Glasgow. Me, in my mother’s womb, and Dan my older brother. My dad had stayed behind to pursue his job as a car mechanic with Forsyth’s, a department store in Renfield Street.  It must have been an awful time for my mother, being away from a strange place and losing the woman who had been a rock in her life. It strikes me now though, sitting here in my mid-seventies being forced to re-collect all this stuff for my inquisitive son who seems to think it’s the stuff of books that maybe it was a welcome break away from an abusive husband but, thinking back, I’m not sure he was always like that. They had made a very bonnie couple, he tall and handsome with a fine head of dark hair, she quite petite with an alluring smile. I’m sure they’d been in love at the start but something had soured it, more than likely his fondness for the bevvie. I wonder if she’d counted on that at the start, or is love truly blind? Mind you, back in those days, most men ‘took a drink’ and it was pot-luck (or Russian-Roulette) which one’s were merry and could control it and which were violent beasts with it. My Father seemed to be among the latter category. Not uncommon in those days for what they now call ‘domestic violence’ to occur. A city like Glasgow was known for it. Some men would give their wives’ ‘a dig’ at the slightest provocation. If you got ‘a good man’ you were lucky. It was quite common to see women with bruised faces and black-eyes. With some you felt they held them as badges of honour, like they had a ‘real man’ or something.

Every time I go out now it’s without him. Every time I come home he’s not there. I hear him saying ‘hi doll!’ in my head but it’s just a remembrance of a voice. Took me near four years before I could bear to put out a photograph of him. It’s on the mantelpiece, I say hello to it when I come in to the front room. His palpable absence is endless and everywhere. Everywhere I go he’s there and yet; he’s not there at all…..ever!

Today they cry it patriarchy, but to women of my generation and before it was just a man’s world. If you had a good father it was good for you, a bad one? it could make your life hell. I was his first daughter and like any daughter I wanted to be his little princess. When he was sober he would be fine. He’d tease me and tell me stories but there was always ‘an elephant in the room’. You couldn't fully trust him for you knew that very likely that same night he’d be an absolute bastard of a man. So, you held yourself back as if, the niceness of him in the day would only make the opposite man at night more shocking and heart-breaking.

We’d be quaking in our beds hearing him rollicking drunk outside the close. He’d be pretending to be all hale-and-hearty admonishing us for not getting up and joining-in his fun but there would be a sinister, sneering edge to his voice and you knew there was only one way this was leading. The air in the wee apartment would turn cold and we would all, my mother included, be as wary as deer near a wolf. We’d pathetically try to humour him but it never worked. Under the influence of booze every grievance in the world roared out of him. What we’d done to him; kept him back; he was so much better than this. One time he brought five live lobsters back with him that one of his drinking friends had sold him (he probably hadn't given my mother any house-keeping that week. God knows how the woman fed us?) then made us witness him boiling them alive. I can still hear the whines and screams to this day. He informed us very grandly that this was the sort of food he deserved and not the muck my mother doled out. He’d make us stay up for hours until he finally went to his drunken slumber.

As a child I had the strong impression that this was what men were like. I found it amazing that my future husband wasn't like this, although he was hard-work and controlling in many other ways. I married him within three months of meeting him, largely because I fell in love with him, but a big part of the swiftness of it was the huge opportunity it offered to get away from my family home.

A woman’s life back then was shaped very much by the men who were in it. A ‘good man’ was one who gave you your house-keeping regular and didn’t hit you. I’m not really sure if they were accorded the respect they were due for this as ‘bad men’ were feared much more, and fear was great currency. Certainly greater than ‘gentleness’ or what would now be called ‘sensitivity’. The world, certainly between men and women, is never black and white. Black and blue sometimes but not black and white.

My father disappeared into the army around nineteen forty-two, and I didn't find out why until years later. I think he was even a chauffeur to General Montgomery at one point during the African Campaign. Except for leave he didn't return until nineteen-forty-six, as if he’d deliberately stayed away as long as he possibly could. Typically, he brought us all gifts then resumed terrorising us of a night-time. Looking back, it was quite blissful when he was away, although my mother had to go out and work as he never sent home a penny.

After the ‘fetching a policeman’ affair which seemed to be far more shameful an event than the terrorisation of his family to my father (and, it seems, my mother) I found myself ‘in a home’ for reasons that were never fully explained to me. I just remember the terrible grief of it, like I was being punished for something; and just maybe I was.

My brother Dan made his escape at the earliest possible opportunity by joining the Merchant Navy at aged sixteen. I guess his young sisters looked upon him as a possible knight in shining armour which was unfair on him as he didn't have it in him to stand up to my Father, so he left us at his mercy. 

What growing up with my father did to my brother is something I never found out. It was never discussed. Sometimes, within families, it’s the most damaging things that are never discussed. You just never talked about them. It wasn't the ‘done thing’.

My mother eventually divorced my father in nineteen-sixty-eight. That wasn't really ‘the done thing’ either. Society seemed to demand that you stay within abusive relationships no matter what.

In sickness and in health.

In brutality and abuse.

‘Til death us do part.

My mother hated me for getting back in touch with the man in the late nineteen-eighties. He told me ‘you’re mother did me a great wrong’. I dismissed this as the expected arrogant misogynist speaking. He still couldn't speak to me for more than an hour without getting all fidgety to be out for a pint.

The sort of ‘emotional abuse’ that was going on in our family was very common. It was ‘common knowledge’ yet, the amazing thing was….nobody was allowed to acknowledge it. Not properly anyway. Maybe a nod and a wink and a bit of butcher-shop gossip, but nothing official. That’s why my policeman business was such an act of betrayal; I think even the policeman thought so. I’d put him in a very difficult position. I had him involved in a domestic.

One motivation that my father instilled in all of us, however inadvertently, was a desire to leave his presence at the soonest possible opportunity. Iain Duncan Smith and Norman Tebbitt would have loved him. We were only too happy to ‘get on our bike’s’ and make our own way in the world.

You never escape the scars of it though. None of us did.

Mary McWaw Mathews
I’m dictating this (as if any of you are interested) through my Grandson who is still alive (just!) and lives on the east coast of Scotland (for reasons known only to himself). One reason I cannot write it myself is that I am long dead, and also I cannot write very well. They taught reading and writing at the school I briefly attended but it didn’t quite catch with me. In fact, a good few of us managed to slip through the literacy net. If you were poor they didn’t really bother to ensure you were literate, they were just glad to get rid of you as quickly as possible (thirteen in my case and glad to be out of it).
My Grandson seems to be the only one of my line that is at all interested in the life of someone like me. (Only he knows why).  I spent an entire lifetime trying to keep myself to myself in the accepted west coast of Scotland manner and now this arsehole wants to come along and expose it all by demanding my narrative.
My legacy has had a bit of a bad press if truth be known. The word ‘nutter’ has been bandied about a lot as well as ‘mentally ill’. I never saw myself that way and I was never really bothered what even those close to me thought. I had aspirations which I walked through walls to achieve. I notice though that those doing me down have not done half as well as I did in life (this big sap for instance, still lives in rented accommodation and falls fail to the drink at the slightest provocation). He’s not half the man his Grandpa was, which is the same opinion I had of his father, my poor deluded son, Robert who is now with me, his Dad and his Brother in the spirit plane.
I was born in the shipyard town of Greenock in 1905 the youngest of thirteen children (and no we weren't Catholics, thank you very much, although I had a sister who married a Fenian bookie but we don’t speak of her). I’ll fill you in on what happened to my siblings as we go along, some of them died young, some of them didn't, and I eventually left all of them behind as I strove my way out of the social mire. I was born twenty four years after my parents were married, and I was to become a mother myself for the second time at the ripe old age of thirty nine, but more of that later. We moved to Shettleston in the east end of Glasgow when I was only two, and I lived in an over-crowded tenement until I was to become married to my husband, Alan at the age of twenty-eight. He was the first man I’d met who could help deliver me from my poor surroundings.
My father was a puffer-boat captain or so he said. He may well have been once, but in my opinion the nearest he got to sailing would have been the Govan ferry. He liked to portray himself as Para Handy but I only ever knew him to be claiming the dole and it was my mother who earned our keep. She was a French Polisher, a trade she was to pass on to yours truly, and it served me well.
Glasgow, certainly in the part I grew up in, was a dark and dirty place. The Parkhead Forge spewed industrial filth into the air and you could stand outside its walls if you needed a heat. I don’t want to portray myself as a wee female Fagin but I learned early on how to scrounge a ha’penny or a farthing out of folk. I didn't mind begging; found no shame in it at all. In fact, I was still getting off on the thrill of a ‘freebie’ in my mid-seventies living as a not-too-badly-off widow in the coastal town of Ayr.
This would be in a time when my literary Grandson actually knew me. I’d have been fifty-five when he was born but I’d been an auld yin for quite a few years by then. People turned to old folk in their forties back then, as everything was done according to social rote. Your kids had their own kids and you were a grandparent quite young. I’d started the whole marriage thing quite late so I lagged behind a wee bit. There’s a reason for this that I may come to later, if I can be arsed. Suffice for now to say that I was five years older than my husband which was quite an oddity at the time, but then, haven’t I always been quite the oddity? You should never let such a thing stand in the way of what you want. Never let what people think of you get in your way, I never did.
There are and were some who say that I was very selfish as a person. There may be some truth in this. Maybe I wasn't driven to succeed only for myself though. Or maybe I was, I really couldn't tell you. Maybe their perception of me is faulty. Maybe they didn't grow up the youngest of thirteen in a slum in Shettleston. If that experience doesn't drive you to better things then maybe it is you who are the loser. Life is dog eat dog, isn't that how it works?
Money makes the world go around, and money, every last farthing of it, became an obsession with me.
It is true that when I took my grandson out walking with me, when his mother was laid up having her second child, people would give the little blonde-haired lad money in the Glasgow custom – two bob, a couple of silver sixpence’s – and I would keep them.
It is true that when my wasteful son, Robert would bring his bus conductors takings home in his leather satchel from the nightshift that I would steal a good few coppers out of it.
I couldn’t help it. It all added to the drive for what came to be called ‘upward mobility’ but what we just called ‘getting on’. Hey, I was the youngest child.  Sure, I was going to be competitive. Competitive and highly manipulative.
I was both a scrimper and a saver, and a petty thief if I had to be.
No hot water for the dishes, hand-me-down clothes for the boys (I used to patch Roberts trousers with bits of carpet). All frugal.  All for a final goal in mind.
I worked though. By God I worked. Long hours and all hours. I worked from when I was nine years old, going to school only when absolutely necessary, when the truant officers poked their noses in. I would be cleaning fancy houses, a sort of freelance domestic servant never stuck to one place. I was learning my trade as a French Polisher with my dear old mother. My father was a kindly man but completely useless in all other ways, though I loved him for his warmth but tried not to let it infect me.
I collected jam jars and ginger bottles and took them to the grocer’s for their return value. I didn’t spend money on frivolities like going to the pictures or buying sweeties. I saved it all up for a rainy day.
I learned early on that there’s money to be made from the well off. I’d clean their houses, and from this I knew I wanted what I could get of their life-style. Somehow, however inconceivable it might be, I would get a nice home of my own. By whatever means necessary.
My early life knew tragedy all too well. I lost two brothers in the Great War, and I lost another brother who ended up under a stack of fallen wood on the docks. I lost my mother when I was fourteen years old. Thirteen children and a feckless, if loving, husband had worn her out by her late fifties and she died in her sleep one night. That woman was my inspiration. My old Dad lived well into his eighties puffing on his pipe and telling tall-tales.
I wasn't what you’d call a good-looking child. For a girl I had a masculine look. Wavy, mousey hair and a biggish nose. I was both dumpy and frumpy-looking. Big-boned. No boys ever chased around me and girls didn’t want to be seen with me. Like I say, I was an oddity, left to my own devices. On the plus side, I was free to be whatever I wanted to be, as long as it didn’t require good looks to do it.
My family were a hard, feral bunch; my father would be away up the western isles on his puffer boat (I lie at the drop of a hat, as you can see) and my brothers and sisters, or those that remained, were free to fight and fornicate all they wanted. Had to be tough in a tough world.

There stands a lady on the mountain,
Who she is I do not know,
All she wants is gold and silver,
All she wants is a nice young man.

His final days in that hospice were just awful. He didn't want me there, then asked my son ‘where’s your mum?’ accusatively. It was a red-hot summer, the trains were off, and the replacement bus service took hours. I didn't know what to do for the best. It was often that way with him. My sons told me that as he was dying, thunder and lightning crackled and roared in the sky. That was him alright!

Mary Michie
Mary Michie edged along an unknown road in the dark. She couldn't see three feet in front of her but even if she could, her tears would have blinded her.
“Awkward sod would have to die during the bloody black-out”
Her heart was broken.
They’d not even offered her a bed at the hospital even though it was the middle of the night. Just sent her on her way, a grieving woman just widowed.
She wouldn't have taken them up on such an offer anyway, she was too upset to sleep. The seventeen mile walk from the hospital in Erskine to Bridgeton in the east end of Glasgow was actually good for her in a way. It gave her time to think about her predicament, terrifying though it may be. Though, she could have done without the black, bleak darkness.
Gangrene they’d said, from an old wound suffered in the last fiasco. Lost the lower part of a leg. Her lovely man had let her children and nieces play with his wooden leg – made a big joke out of it. Finally succumbed to an injury from the first war in the midst of a second. She’d held his hand as he died. Said ‘goodbye my lovely man’. Now she had to harden her heart and look after their children.
How lonely life can be sometimes. Lonely and so, so tough. Experiences either shape you or destroy you, she thought. She had no option but to adapt.
She was glad he was out of his pain; the agonies and indignities at the end. She was also glad she could at least be with him at the end. They’d meant so much to each other.
She stumbled home to her children in the darkness. She had much to suffer yet, and she could only hope that out of darkness came some shred of light.



Friday, 21 November 2014

Working Man


I’m standing in a disused quarry on the very outskirts of Kilmarnock; not so much standing as planted, feet firmly apart as if in a martial arts stance or the haka stance of the All-Blacks, yes that’s what I’m doing, I’m doing a Kilmarnock haka, a Glaswegian stuck in Kilmarnock by mistake via the Bohemian life in London haka. A what-the-fuck-am-I-doing-in-this-back-of-beyond haka: screaming at the clouds in the sky, at the rain pelting down, emptying my lungs of my immense frustration, the day-to-day Kilmarnock-ness of it all. I am the man in the disused quarry screaming and stamping, crying and laughing. Screaming ‘NOT THE GARDEN CENTRE AGAIN TOMORROW’ ‘NOT ANOTHER WALK TO THE SHOPPING CENTRE’ ‘NOT A LOOK IN THE GONK SHOP WINDOW AND THEN HOME FOR TEA’

‘GET ME FUCKING OUT OF HERE...!’

I am the mixed-up man with the mixed-up wife. A rootless two-some torn between a sense of family and place and a wild yearning to be free of both: seeking a non-existent comfort in the mundane and the ordinary, and a Milligan-esque disdain of such imposters. Rootless and fancy-free; making knee-jerk mistakes in my fifties.

Still searching for the real me.

Lonely Boy

I was born on a Wednesday in the cold February of 1935 in a house in Shettleston, Glasgow. This much is true. My mother, I was later to learn, was a coffin polisher, my father an engineer, an odd social-occupational arrangement.

Contrary to my adult claims, I was raised in Garrowhill, a semi-affluent area of the city. An aspirant area in a semi-detached house: not a single-end, or a tenement, and definitely not a slum. I honestly wish I had been brought up in less exalted circumstances, it would have fitted my later image of myself more easily, but, perhaps I wouldn’t have rebelled. Perhaps I wouldn’t have had anything to rebel against.

I rebelled against my father, poor man. Card-carrying Mason; bowler-hatted, establishment man. I was to rebel against all of that big-time. I never managed to dis-own his melancholy though, that was too hard-wired. My mother and father went on to aspire their way to Ayrshire suburbia. I chose the opposite direction. Perhaps I was the only individual, in the whole of Scotland, maybe in the history of the world, other than the religiously committed, to seek to aspire downwards. I was to become determinedly, downwardly mobile.

From an early age, I saw my mother as an unusual woman. Very hard-working and very determined, she owned both coldness and warmth. As a child, I often felt my existence to be an encumbrance to her, like something that for reasons of social propriety had to exist but was otherwise in her way. 

Though, when she had time, she dispersed in my direction all the appropriate coo-cooing and loving baby-talk.

She was the youngest of thirteen in a family that really did come from the slums of Shettleston. 

Father an unemployed seaman, mother in service, my mother had grown up with poverty. That’s what made her so determined and wilful enough to claw her way out of it by whichever means she could. One of these means was my father. How did she, plain-looking and six-years older, manage to snare herself an engineer?  By dint of this occupation, he could have, in the parlance of the times, ‘done better’. A snazzy-dressing, ruddy-faced young engineer would surely be looking for other than this woman. She had clearly turned his head by some means – sex perhaps? Had she prostituted her way out of the gutter? Quite possibly! This was a woman of feral cunning. He was the possessor of a naive innocence. He was a callow twenty-two when they married; she twenty-eight; unusual for the times. The age-gap was common, but it was the wrong way round.

They were a couple of stoaters right enough. In all my time with them, I never knew them to have any friends. Nodding acquaintances and neighbours perhaps, but never friends round for a meal and a drink, never a night out at the pub or a club. Every penny earned went toward their aspirations – onwards and upwards.

Even as a child I could tell it wasn't a happy marriage. There would be vast expanses of weeks when they wouldn’t talk to one another. A child picks up on that. These are the nineteen-thirties, way before any notion of child psychology or sophisticated parenting. As a child I was well aware I wasn't born out of love, I was born more out of convention. Being aspirational they were super-careful to play by the social rules. Couples didn’t remain childless unless for biological reasons, so they had children (though my brother didn't appear until nine years after me when my mother was in her late thirties, so they only just scraped under the conventional wire in achieving the super-average amount of two children). A great many children were born out of convention then, they still are. Love didn't necessarily enter into the equation.

Did I love them? Of course, I did. I was their child. Did they fuck me up? Of course, they did. They were weird parents. Up until my brother appeared I was lonely as hell.

On the fringes of social exile

Didn't matter that I lived in a slightly posh neighbourhood I was still in the catchment area for the school where the slum kids went. Life is all about breaks, this was a bad one.

I found out early on that I was not naturally disposed toward violence and aggression. When you’re perpetually being picked on for being ‘the posh kid’ this is a problem. The east end of Glasgow does not look sympathetically upon scared kids – it devalues the currency of an area proud of its tough reputation. You have to shape up. This is why one day when I was twelve and having a bad time at my new secondary school I found myself running at a crowd of boys in the playground whirling a potato on a string above my head. What good would that do, I hear you ask?  Does it hurt being assaulted by a swinging potato?

It does when there are razor blades implanted in it....

You should have seen them run.

Due to my parent's constant vigilance over money, or rather saving money I found myself sent out in many a bizarre outfit. Certainly, my clothes were never the fashion of the time, such as it was. Most boys were dressed like mini-versions of their fathers.

No-one was dressed like me though. No-one else had their trousers patched with bits of carpet. No-one else wore a welly and a shoe, one on either foot. This unusual pedal assemblage will tend to mark you out from your peers. Even wearing no footwear at all was more acceptable than a wellington boot on one foot and a plain old shoe on the other. The shoe was brown too whereas the welly was in the traditional black – even the colours didn’t match. How I dreamed that one day the shoe would at least be black like the boot. No footwear at all had at least the dignity of poverty, you had nothing more to lose, but, a welly and a shoe? It raised too many undignified questions both for myself and my peers. Principally; did my parents think so little of me that they would send me out like this? Had they no inclination of what this would mean for a growing boy?

And, by the way, carpet is, almost without exception, heavier than trouser material. This leads to pronounced sagging especially when wet.

And it seemed to be constantly raining throughout my childhood.

Rain and bombs

Four years-old when the war started, six-years-old when the first bombs dropped on Clydeside, but what does one remember at that age? My father had constructed our Anderson Shelter perfectly and well ahead of time. My dad was a perfectionist who seemed to be supremely competent at everything he turned his hand to. I had no option but to rebel against him, I certainly had no hope of matching him. This, he would let me know on a consistent basis throughout my upbringing. Could never mow the grass properly, paint a wall correctly. He’d always check the work and invariably make me do it again, or if it was totally useless, re-do it himself.

‘Robert, you've missed the edges. You have to learn to do a job properly, what have I told you?’

Thing was, it was impossible to meet his standards, so what do you do except  dread him ever asking you to do anything – a cold fear clutching at your innards as you were summoned to his shed.
So we’d sit in our perfectly assembled shelter during the air raids wondering where Goering’s targets were that night. Mrs McParland and her son from across the road were allowed to share our shelter and as they were the only ‘visitors’ we ever had, even on such an un-social circumstance it was felt by my father that an effort had to be made to entertain our guests. This brought out another side to my father, a side that couldn't be more unexpected to those who knew him if he’d started doing a strip-tease.

My father, wouldn't you know it, was an accomplished banjo player, at least he was accomplished enough to accompany himself singing such songs as ‘The Chocolate-Coloured Coon’ and ‘Down Kentucky Way’ (he was a big G.H. Elliot fan). The sight of this normally quiet man, as unprepossessing as can be, transformed into a blitz-night Vaudeville entertainer left me open-mouthed with wonder. What the rest of the street thought as these sounds emanated toward them I have never found out. People didn’t speak of very much at all to one another in those days. It wasn’t the done thing. The weather, road works, and the price of fish – these were the topics of conversation. 

‘Conventional conversation’ – that’s a phrase that sums it up nicely.

Until the arrival of my beloved brother when I was nine years old, I was a lonely, solitary only child. I didn’t fit-in at school or in the outside world of play and friendships, and even my home life was essentially a lonely experience.  I wasn’t allowed to be in the house when my parents were out and this made me a latch-key kid long before some social worker invented the phrase. A subtle difference with me was, I didn’t even possess a key. On cold days I waited out the hours until one of my parents came home crouched in my father’s green-house. As an adult I would write this poem about it, appropriately entitled Greenhouse;

I needed a refuge, a place to be warm.
Away from a Scottish wind
Which sought-out the thin, and the lost?

I was denied entry to the tailored place,
The buttoned-down, swept, and washed house
Where warmth was tidied away;
Where cakes and kisses were carefully counted,
Except in monsoon times when love,
And, kisses were profligate.

I needed the thin key to
The garden-end greenhouse
Where I could sit away from the cold and
Disappointment, a place to sit-out the
After school hours
Until my mother lit the ice palace,
And offered comfort, cold as the
Frost-breathed interior.

‘The ice palace’, I like that. Even if I do say it myself.

Our area wasn't hit much by the air-raids, a few stray explosions at Sandyhills. One day a broken Messerschmitt was transported on a lorry up the Shettleston Road, I remember thinking how alien it looked with its swastikas and unfamiliar design. The cockpit and one of the wings was missing, obviously it had been shot down. Some of the boys were allowed to get up on the lorry and investigate further, see if there was any blood, but I was too timid and squeamish to join in.

Though, as you’ll have gathered from my whirling potato story I wasn't always so timid. The old bugger across the road, Mister Watt, was always complaining to my father about me playing football in the street (I was football mad). He’d sequestrate my ball when he got a hold of it. In retaliation, I painted the stone lions which adorned either side of his front gate. I wonder if it was because he was a staunch Rangers supporter that I painted them green.

Any social outcast in the world will tell you that the only friends and allies he’ll make are other social outcasts. My friends were like me, strange and socially inept in some way. One of these was another ‘posh boy’ from Camp Road where I lived. He was a gentle chap called Jamie Campbell and his social embarrassment was that he was fat and wore spectacles. He looked like you might imagine ‘Piggy’ from Lord of the Flies. I was very fond of Jamie and we were both pleased to have found a kindred outcast. It was with Jamie in the woods behind Garrowhill Park that I saw the giant. The giant was about twelve feet tall and spindly like a big human jenny-long-legs. He had a hat on his head which he lifted from his head and smiled at me. I was absolutely petrified to the spot and so was Jamie and we never told anyone about it afterward; it was our secret. We never went back to those woods either though we often dared each other that we would. If he’s writing his story right now, he’ll be telling about the giant too.

My best friend was my Grandpa Matthews or ‘Skipper’ Matthews as he was known around the Shettleston/Tollcross area. He fancied himself a sort of ‘Para Handy’ figure and told tales of puffer boats and the Western Isles. It’s likely his only ‘sea-faring’ experience involved the Govan Ferry, but he was a kindly old man so his past went un-questioned. He was my mother’s father and would spend some time with me, a commodity that few in my life seemed prepared to invest. His choice of entertainment though was rather odd. He’d hide little stubs of pencils that he’d collected around our little area of Tollcross Park and give me clues about where to find them. I’d spend hours searching for them as he sat puffing on his pipe like The Old Man of the Sea.

Gangs of kids used to play at the sand quarry off Hamilton Road. The quarry had been long disused and was just sheer walls of sand at the bottom of which was two large pools of water. I would tag along with the other kids always aware that I was there through their sufferance or because they plain hadn't noticed me. I tried to impress them with daring jumps or being the first to palm a baggy-minny but, it was to no avail. More often than not I’d end up walking off on my own and into my own little world.

My internal voice was really my best friend during my childhood and on for the rest of my life until the day I died. Is this the same for everyone? I’ve never really asked anyone. I’d invent games at home with my marbles, football-orientated games and I’d provide my own commentary. I’d devise elaborate golf courses on the carpet which was patterned with both squares and circles – squares were bunkers and circles were greens. I’d flick the marbles deftly up the fairways and on to the greens in regulation par. I could amuse myself in such ways for many hours.

Like every child, I had great dreams for myself. I’d be a real-life Dick Barton:Special Agent or I’d play centre-forward for Celtic like Jimmy McGrory or Jimmy Delaney.

This Celtic-supporting was the first clear indication of my rebellious nature; of the thrawn bugger I was to become. Not only did it make me the only tim in a school full of huns, but it ran completely contrary to my father’s Rangers affiliations. My father, the card-carrying member of Kinning Park Rangers Supporters Club now had a Celtic-lover in the house.

To be fair, he didn’t mind much. I suspect he was a member of these things more for his own quest for respectability and advancement than any rabid hatred of all things Catholic. As long as no-one important found out his son was a traitor to the cause then no harm was done.

So my rebellion was perhaps ineffectual, though my love for Celtic Football Club was true and genuine for the next sixty years until I resigned indignantly from life in the ‘Socialist Burgh of Hackney’ at the age of seventy-one.

The Best Gift They Ever Gave Me

My brother, Billy, was born when I was nine. He William Wylie, me Robert. I never felt ‘put-out’ for one second by his arrival, quite the reverse. I felt that the world had offered me a potential release from my loneliness, and I loved my brother deeply until his premature death at age fifty-six in the year two thousand. I would take him for walks in his pram, I would talk to him and make sure he was comfy; I would make him gurgle and smile. Later, when he was able to walk I would insist that he learn to fly by whizzing around the front room until it made the poor wee mite cry and my mum told me to stop.

Even later, I would teach him to be a Celtic supporter too and we would play crazy tricks on my dad. Once, in the even more salubrious locale of Clarkson (the Wylie aspirational plan was paying off) we made a sign with Joe’s Cafe written on it and a finger pointing in the direction of my dad’s garden shed. Puzzled ‘customers’ had to be disabused of their desire for refreshments and sent away disappointed.

Second-son syndrome kicked in in Billy’s favour and he was never, to my knowledge, forced to wear strange clothing (I have to confess here that my ‘welly and shoe’ situation only lasted a few weeks one winter until a cheap, hardy pair of shoes could be found but that I was kitted out like that at all I think speaks volumes of a thrifty attitude to parenting – my parents revelled in the rationing times, it provided an excuse for strict domestic economy – they must have felt a little exposed when it came to an end).

Billy and I would become comrades in our fight for survival in the crazy family we belonged to. 

We’d also become significantly damaged by it in our own unique ways.

My mother as I mentioned was a coffin polisher. Well, she was a French polisher whose job was to polish coffins. This she did at Fyfe Douglas – Casket Makers in Salamanca Street, Parkhead and she worked all the hours she could get. Even when she was bringing me and my brother up as small children she’d take us along to work with her. There was no crèche; we were just there in our prams beside her as she worked. When she wasn’t working in the coffin factory she would take jobs cleaning in local schools. The money she earned from this along with my father’s above-average wage went toward saving for the next step up the ladder – the next house to buy, the next car.

The household sacrifices made to facilitate this upward mobility were manifold. Only buttering one slice of bread when making a sandwich, all washing-up done in cold water, in fact, use of hot water for any activity, even personal hygiene, was at a premium, bath-time was never a warm, cosy affair. And the food we were served was ‘cheap and cheerful’ only without the cheerful. Cold meat and potatoes were a regular offering.

My mother’s psychology would merit a PhD thesis. As a concerned adult, I was advised by her doctor that she probably had ‘mental issues’. She couldn’t be argued with, any dissent or argument aimed in her direction and she’d spit at you like a goose. It’s almost certain that she couldn’t read or write, and despite her rise up the ranks with my father she never lost the ‘stain’ of poverty. She dressed like an old woman when still in her forties and was a constant embarrassment to her very image-conscious husband.

As part of their social demeanour started to include works dinners and events and holidays abroad, my mother’s bizarre behaviour and style of speech must have had him cringing in his seat. She was pre-Hilda Ogdon with her malapropisms and oral irregularities. A popular song at the time ‘See the Pyramids along the Nile’ became in my mother’s tangled imagination ‘See the Peerie-Wees That Laugh and Smile’.  She was loud and gauche whereas my father was quiet and only ever sought respectability. To say he had the wrong wife would be a mistake in only one sense. Whether by her pushing and bullying him or, whether by mutual consent, possibly a bit of both, they both achieved what they had set out to do; they made it to suburban respectability. In all other senses, they were surely completely incompatible.

My mother informed my future wife who she delighted in upsetting, that she was ‘glad all that was over with’. She was referring to sex. By this time (they’d be at their final destination, a beautiful and well-situated ‘retirement’ bungalow in the ‘well-to-do’ outskirts of Ayr) they would barely talk to each other at all; my father would spend as much time as he could working on his prize-winning roses or in his shed making a variety of different wines, all of them tasting like the Madeira he’d started with. My mother’s domain would be indoors; each of them seeking to be where the other wasn’t. They’d only put on a show of togetherness when I would visit with my sons (but increasingly, not my wife).

I got my own psychology almost equally from both; the gentle sadness from my dad, and a bit of cunning manipulation from my mother. I also developed her primitive Munchausen into something a wee bit more sophisticated. I don’t think my brother ever truly knew who he was and would very quickly seek the drug and alcohol habit that would lead him to an early grave. He sought oblivion and he was successful in finding it.

As a prolific poet in adult life if writing about my family I only ever really wrote about my father and my brother, and the latter only because he was dying or dead. Greenhouse is the only poem, other than A Letter to Dead Parents, where I refer to my mother at all. I think if I had written about my mother at all, I may have had to face myself too much as well. Psychologically I think I resembled her too much. My father I felt an affinity with but in a different more mournful way.
I always felt my father was a sad and unfulfilled man. He was a respected engineer but was never pushy enough to get himself into any serious positions of authority. Of course, maybe he had no real ambition to, but it always seemed that he was always being overtaken, even by people he’d trained. 

He worked at ‘Mavors and Coulsons’ just off Bridgeton Cross (and my father would have said Bridgeton not the courser Brigton, an important cultural identifier that), and he was of the brown-coated supervisory staff (the one photo I’ve seen of him and his colleagues actually has him peeking out from the very back row). The company made and invented equipment for the mining industry and I’m pretty confident that if you delve deeply enough into the archives you’ll find my father was responsible for inventing at least one mining device, although what it is I have no idea. I visited him at his work once, a fact I recounted in the following poem My Father in Memory;

As I approached the factory gate
I recognised the smell
The same oily exciting smell
That touched our house
When my father came home
In the late evenings
And I would stretch to kiss his red cheek
Smelling the oil, and soap
My best school shoes
Rattled on the drizzle-covered
Uneven cobble-stones

The old man in the gatehouse
Welcomed me in his
Brown store-man’s coat
And with an old man’s smile
Took me up the greasy metal stairways
Towards the noise
Somewhere above
In the great machine shop

My father waited for me
His silver hair matching well
The gleaming metal
Being worked in the machines
“This your boy Tom?”
Asked a worker nearby
“Yes, this is Robert”
Dues had been paid on both sides
-Correct things said

Somehow I felt smaller and thinner
Than I already was
Out of place in this metal kingdom
Ruled by a sad king
With silver hair

I was glad to get out
Into the dirty cobbled streets
Away from the eerie sadness
And the warm smell of oil
Veiling the unfulfilled dreams
Of a rosy-faced, silver haired man.

You can tell I loved my father very much; I just didn't want to be like him.

The singer and his song



I grew up in this post-war environment when young people had to make a choice. Were they going to follow tradition and become like their parents or was there another path they could follow? The late forties and fifties was a time for rebellion in many spheres. The British public threw out Churchill and voted in a government that was radical and offered social and economic improvements to the masses. At the same time, young men like myself were desperately seeking alternatives to becoming replicas of their fathers. Rebellion for me took the shape of Celtic, Socialism, Charlie Parker and Spike Milligan. Virtually everything my father wasn’t about. I wonder if he ever took it personally.

I didn't even leave school with the basic Leaving Certificate so undistinguished was my academic prowess. I don’t remember this ever being addressed, neither parenterally or by my school-masters. 

Being the posh kid from the posh area you’d think there would be expectations that I would succeed beyond the hoi-polloi but I was left to drift somewhat aimlessly into sub-mediocrity. This can happen to un-favoured kids. Not in the least popular among my fellow pupils, I was considered an odd fish by my teachers too – ‘neither fish nor fowl’ as one would describe me. What I lacked, crucially, was confidence and I wasn’t being offered any from any quarter. Entering adulthood and beyond my mother, more than once, offered the opinion that ‘you’ll never be the man your father is’. Why thank you mother, how helpful!

Yet, weeds will grow through pavements. Lack of any positive stimulus from school or at home forced me to manufacture my own. I had become quite a perverse, self-sufficient individual, at least in terms of resolve. Using this facade I was able to shrug off all the negative press and move forward at least with an idea of myself. At any rate, even my father had to agree I was good at one thing;

“Quick son, there’s a horse and cart”
My Dad, a great rhubarb man,
Seldom missed a chance to
Send me out into the streets
With brush and shovel
To gather up dung
In a big galvanised bucket.
I delighted in his delight –
A full pail of the smelly stuff
He taught me to mix the dung
In a steel barrel – “slosh
In the water, son, and feed
The rhubarb” “Your Ma will
Make us Crumble with it”.
If I had lived in
A Welsh village I would
Have been known as
“Robert the Dung”.

The other thing I was good at was singing. My musical sensibilities were acute. While others were turning on to rock and roll I was mad about Be Bop. I liked Charlie and Dizzy then Miles. I dug Sarah Vaughn and Billy Eckstein more than I dug Sinatra, he was too main-stream, though I admit I dug Bing Crosby, loved his tone and the control he had of his voice. He swung more than people gave him credit for.

I wanted to be a singer too. So I became one.

I did have back-up careers in the RAF and as a Glasgow Corporation tram-driver.

I was that singing brake-man.

The singing was the main thing though, and I embraced this profession diligently. I knew hundreds of songs and sang with dozens of bands, the famous Billy McGregor Band among them.  It was one night after singing at the Yoker Civic Hall that I was approached by a well-known figure on the semi-professional circuit. ‘Cuddles’ Duguid was a pianist in the Digits McPhee mould. Bit of honky tonk, touch of ragtime, all the standards, but, like me, he was a jazzer at heart.

He had a band The Nighthawk Syncopaters and he wanted me to sing with them. My stage name was Eddie Warner so it would be Cuddles Duguid and the Nighthawk Syncopaters featuring Eddie Warner. The thing that was important to me about Cuddles and his band was that they had no time for the brash and the showy. They didn't want me to sing like Buggy Greco, all bouffant and toothy smiles, they liked the music I liked, the songs that I liked; the ballads that had been covered by our Modern Jazz heroes – Autumn Leaves, Someday My Prince Will Come, My Funny Valentine, September in the Rain, East of the Sun. I was a purist. Cuddles and the band would play pick-up for all sorts of style of singer. This was the era of rock and roll. Popular crooners were Perry Como and Bobby Darin. Pat Boone was another popular favourite. I would have no truck with any of these. I wouldn’t cover their songs; I wouldn't adopt their style of presentation. Not for me the Buddy Greco cabaret-ruffle and his gallus ‘showbiz’ shazzam.

We played in dance halls up and down the west coast of Scotland and, when not singing with Cuddles I’d be entering and winning talent contests. Of course, this fame, however parochial led to the welcome attention of females.

There were strict protocols in those days when ‘going out’ with young women. These would sometimes see a person ‘seeing a girl home’ to far-flung places like Yoker by bus then not having the money to get the bus back to Clarkston. For those of you that do not know Glasgow (and even those of you who do), that is a long fucking walk, with perhaps only the darkness, the rain, and the wind for company. It had to be done though, especially if you wanted to see her again.

Cuddles had an interesting way with the ladies, famous as he was for telling them ‘jist pull doon ma singlet when yer finished’. He was a dumpy little man who wore galoshes onstage and chain-smoked, but he was a very competent pianist and a skilled musician which you had to be then. You had to know hundreds of tunes with the ability to transpose any of them to any key.

This would be around the time of my service with Glasgow Corporation Transport as a tram driver. I was discharged from National Service with the RAF on medical grounds; they thought I was a nut-case. Evidence for this would eventually seem conclusive when I attempted to run through a solid wooden door. I had issues, shall we say, with authority and taking orders. I had by this time become quite unconventional in terms of my world view, or perhaps anti-conventional would describe it better. Like all true outsiders, I had psychological and emotional defiance towards everything I believed had cast me out. I did not like National Service. Assigned to the Mountain Rescue Corps I would joke to my children and wife at every given opportunity that in all my time there I never knew of one mountain that needed rescuing. My eldest son would recite this to a bemused gathering at my funeral in the London Borough of Enfield. The truth is that I was extremely emotionally disturbed in the RAF, hence the running at doors. They even made me ‘Senior Man’ of the barracks at one point, I think in an attempt to encourage me to join in. This proved futile and I endeavored daily and actively to find a way out.

One intriguing though tragic event happened during my National Service. One of the other trainee airmen hung himself over the bed next to mine; in his suicide note, he mentioned me as being the cause of this drastic action. He said that I’d been using my meagre authority to bully him and that this had sent him over the edge. This was truly puzzling to me and I actually ended up comforting his parents and travelling to Yorkshire to attend his funeral. My superiors along with his family seemed to accept that he was finding National Service a difficult and lonely affair (there were many more suicides during National Service than the general public got to know about, there were six to my knowledge in my brief experience of military service), and that he was a young man pre-disposed to depression. I have always thought that maybe he saw in me a kindred spirit who he’d failed to impress or befriend. Rather a spiteful thing to do though; blame someone for your suicide.

Another memorable fact from my time as an airman was that I was the singer with the Kinloss Kalamities Concert Party, and there are not many that can say that.

Tram driver was more my measure. A working-class position if ever there was one, and requiring very little skill. I started as a conductor then gravitated toward the driving job. People who have known me well would say that I was temperamentally unsuited to any sort of driving position: in later life I was never to achieve a driver’s license, being advised by one instructor not to pursue the ambition as I had a tendency to be ‘dangerously pre-occupied’. He didn’t need to tell me this, 

Glasgow Corporation Tramways advised me of much the same thing after I’d run one of their vehicles off the rails and almost up a close, a collision I had anticipated by running up the stairs to avoid the worst of it.

I had enjoyed the tram driving though; my route was Newlands Garage on the south side of the city to University in the north-west. I used to ‘clank’ my future wife’s young sister as she made her way home from school in Woodside. On more than one occasion I would catch my mother *(we were living in Clarkston by now in a very smart bungalow indeed. Upon leaving the RAF, I was unaware that they had moved there from Garrowhill as they hadn’t seen fit to tell me) pilfering the copper coins from my bag of takings which could have cost me my job if I hadn’t cottoned on.

The End of the Single Life

It was through singing in the dancehalls that I met the woman who would be my wife for forty-eight years. I used to enter and win talent competitions at The Locarno in Sauchihall Street. Sometimes the prize for these was free entry into ‘the dancing’ for a week. ‘The dancing’ was a way of life for young people in Glasgow in those days. Everyone dressed smartly in the latest fashions. I preferred to wear ‘Billy Eckstein’ shirts and had my hair combed back in a sort of proto ‘DA’ or ‘ducks-arse, more Tony Curtis than Teddy Boy which was a whole different ball game. Girls dressed in kitten shoes and wide crinoline skirts with tiny waists.

There were a great many dancehalls in Glasgow in the mid to late fifties. For me, The Locarno was chief, but there was also the Denistoun Palais, the Barrowland, F & Fs, Green’s Playhouse, The Plaza on Eglinton Toll and many, many more. I must have sung or danced at all of them at one time or other and many more up the east and west coast of Scotland; Bobby Jones in Ayr, the Duke in Kinloss, and The Palace Ballroom in Rothesay. As I’ve said I wouldn’t conform to singing other than the beautiful ballads of the Jazz Songbook and I think that this was what ensured that I wouldn’t endure or progress as a singer. I’m not even sure how serious I was about it. I was glad of any applause I got, and the attention from females was very welcome indeed.

It was my lovely singing voice that brought the attention of my future wife, Jean. On only our second date I was due to sing at the Locarno. She’d enjoy telling our two boys later on that if I’d been ‘rid-rotten’ she’d have been off her mark and maybe we’d never have got married.

Glasgow in the mid to late fifties was a brash city. It was a city full of itself and its own myth. The novel No Mean City written in the 1930s had confirmed its reputation of being a violent and dangerous city to socialize in. Glasgow then as now does its best to live up to its own stereotype. It was a dark city, ill lit by its sodium street-lamps. Its night-time soundtrack was drunken shouts and smashing bottles. You never knew the minute when it would all kick off. Violence was fuelled by Benzedrine and strong drink.

The same mixture that induced me to take a flying hieder off the balcony in The Locarno. I laid myself and a couple of dancers in hospital with that one; lucky they were there to break my fall. 

Don’t ask me why I did things like this, probably a death-wish combined for a yearning for attention. 

I wanted to be different and accepted all at the same time. Go figure!

Jean and I were married within three months of first meeting much to the horror of our respective families. My own mother would never see Jean as ‘good enough’ for her son. By then my folks looked down, quite literally, on most of the rest of Glasgow, living as they did high on a hill in posh Clarkston.

Jean’s father was an alcoholic mechanic and they lived in a basement in Bath Street, not exactly a slum, but not exactly Clarkston either. I knew that Jean and I were in love; I also knew she was anxious to get away from her brute of a father, terrorised as she and the rest of her family had been by him for many years. An arrogant man at the best of times, they dreaded his return from his boozing sessions when he would create havoc, not with his fists thankfully but with his threats and protestations that he was ‘better than them’. She told me tales of him bringing home live lobsters and boiling them in a pot for his own edification.  She told me she had fetched a policeman to protect her siblings one night when he was raging mad at her mother. Neither her father nor, sadly, her mother ever forgave her this action. It seemed that domestic violence was socially acceptable, police involvement was not. She’d brought shame on the family with her sisterly action.

For the sake of youthful newly-wed adventure and in a handy maneuver to escape our respective families we buggered off to London to live and hopefully find employment. I worked at the big Heinz factory in Harlesden as a mayonnaise mixer, and as a trainee butcher with The Coop. We lived in a large bedsit in Kensal Green and we were happy. Why did I get married so quickly? Well, Jean and I just seemed to fit. She was attractive to me and maybe I liked the way she needed me. She was the first person who ever did.


Jean suffered a debilitating kidney illness when we were about a year in London and we decided to go back to Glasgow. This would be the first of many moves up and down the country. We were to become a restless couple for many reasons, never really becoming settled anywhere until the very end when it was almost too late.

Che’ Wylie

It was around this time that I was becoming politicized and, true to character, I didn’t do this by half measures. I became an industrial saboteur and militant union rep.

All my working life I refused to compromise. If factory owners would not change conditions or increase wages – I’d put a spanner in the works. Quite literally. I’d break machines.

I’d call wildcat strikes.

Newlywed and newly working at a parts manufacturers in East Kilbride I was elected Shop Stewards Convener. I wasn’t a particularly shrewd Shop Stewards Convener. Never was a cool and cagey negotiator. I got sacked after calling an unofficial strike over a wage demand. The members voted overwhelmingly against it shouting ‘fuck off Wylie’ from the shop floor. The management pulled me in and sacked me (it was weeks since I found out they’d effectively black-listed me as well). The AEF refused to back me and I was thrown out of the union.

How’s that for a Shop Stewards Convener?

Being blacklisted isn’t fun or good for the family economy or morale but in a way I was immensely proud of the fact. It caused untold problems and I couldn’t find a job in the Glasgow area or beyond for love nor money but at least I stood for something and wasn’t just an apathetic drone-pleb allowing myself to be shafted without protest. This was a continuation of my love-hate attitude toward my fellow workers. As a political concept I adored them, in reality, I had feelings for them bordering on contempt and found it hard to forgive them for not standing up for themselves and taking over the world as Karl Marx had predicted they should.

They seemed more inclined to seek divisions between their own fellow workers than uniting and demanding changes. In one shitty job I managed to procure in East Kilbride, literally sweeping the factory floors, I was identified as a Celtic supporter and therefore assumed to be a Catholic. For this ‘crime’ I was advised in no uncertain terms to leave this employment. No protection was offered from the union reps for they too were of the Rangers persuasion. It was, in fact, a Protestant closed shop, an entity not unheard of in the west of Scotland. Employers must have been well gratified by these self-imposed stratifications within the work-force.

It was some time before I was able to obtain in employment in the Glasgow area again, and even then I had to lie to get it. Still living in East Kilbride I applied for a job as a Capstan Setter in a factory on Thornliebank Industrial Estate called Rawlplug. I knew what a Capstan lathe was; I just didn’t know how to operate one. I got books out of the library and studied them but when I started it was obvious to the bloke at the next lathe that I didn’t have a clue what I was doing. Luckily, he was a decent sort and very slowly tutored me in the ways of it.

Very soon, the management got to know of my militant past and one of them called me into the meeting. He told me that he believed in giving people a second chance but any repeat performance at Rawlplug would mean trouble for me.

You’d think that would tober me. Not a bit of it. Within six months I was shop steward.

One interesting development in this period was that I was chosen to manage the works football team. I even got to choose the strip, the smart red and black striped Manchester City away strip tops, black shorts, and black and red socks. I put together a skillful, hardy little outfit and we won promotion from the fourth to the third division of the Renfrewshire Works League in the first season. I also took them down to Essex for a five-a-side tournament, an enjoyable little jolly for the chaps although I didn’t partake in the liquid shenanigans being a tea-totaller not by choice but by dint of on-going stomach complaints that would one day kill me.

 Resurrection Man



For me, my story as a man doesn’t really start until I qualified as a Social Worker in the mid-1970s and became Head of the Foresthall Homeless Families Unit in Springburn, Glasgow. I approached this post in a very political manner too and, as usual, my socialist principles brought me up against many obstacles. Funny how, when you’re trying to do the best for the people you are employed to help, you manage to step on so many of your colleagues’ toes.

With the crucial support and encouragement of my wife I left factory work (before I was sacked and blacklisted again) and began a CQSW at Moray House College, Edinburgh. This experience opened my eyes to a new world populated by idealism and females who resembled Dory Previn, an esteemed folk singer of the time. I attended meetings and soirees, drank wine and sucked on the odd spliff (though this activity caused me extreme paranoia and was not a habit I pursued).

People with a life-long lack of self-esteem tend to either disappear into the woodwork or feel the need to prove themselves in very immediate and dramatic ways. From the start, I was out-spoken and insistent on strong left-wing principles as being the only way to take on society’s ills. I was a crude pain-in-the-arse to some and a ‘bit of a star’ to others. There’s no doubt that my previous life as a factory worker gave me much needed credibility as ‘the genuine article’ – probably the only working-class student on the course in actual fact, and I played this for all it was worth.

I took this to extremes at times, as you might expect. A serious ‘domestic’ broke out high up in the tower block next to the one we lived in. Articles of clothing were being strewn out of the high veranda, and some sort of fire seemed to be blazing within. Oaths such as ‘I’ll do it’ rendered the evening air and a crowd had gathered below to gawp and in some cases, shout encouragement. I made my way through the crowd and took a lift to the appropriate floor. On arrival on the premises I bellowed supportively “Look, I can help, I’m a Social Worker!”

“Fuck off!” was the no-nonsense reply.

I sorted out a secondment at Foresthall Homeless Families Unit in Springburn to the north of Glasgow. I couldn’t believe the conditions there. The residents were treated like prisoners or mental hospital inmates. It was on the same site as the old Barnhill Poorhouse and the ‘poorhouse’ culture had remained. Residents were encouraged towards servility while senior staff wore nurse’s uniforms. These people were homeless for Christ's sakes, they weren’t ill or subject to the Victorian Poor Laws. 

It was run like a penal institution to secure people who had committed no greater crime than being poor and without a home. I railed against this regime from day one, and though only a mere student of social work I made my feelings very clear about how abhorrent I felt the place was. Others, younger and more enlightened among the staff agreed but had not the authority to change it.
Almost on the day I qualified as a Social Worker the job of Head of Foresthall Homeless Families Unit was advertised in The Glasgow Evening Times. I got the job because of my evident conviction to make changes and, as was to be the case again and again in my life, no-one else really wanted to do it.

Newly qualified and already a senior manager, it was going to prove a tough task ahead. I was branded ‘Marxist’ to those that stood against me. I had no reason to disagree with that, it was what fired me on.  I changed the name to ‘Foresthall Family Care Unit’. I felt it conveyed a more positive image. I told them we were here to help and serve these people not oppress and belittle them. I told them the uniforms had to go. I told them the living quarters had to change from dormitories and wards and be renovated into rooms where families could enjoy at least a little privacy and autonomy. 

I told the Social Work Department Field Officers in McIver House that they couldn’t refer just any families that were proving problematic to them, there had to be proper quotas and evaluations. I told the staff they had to be more democratic in their dealings with each other and the residents and less authoritarian.

In short, we had to move at least into the twentieth century.

I brought in my own assistant. I encouraged staff sympathetic to my views. I tried to come to terms with my objectors. When this failed, I fought tooth and nail with them until they either moved on or toed the line. Christ! I had more trouble with my own colleagues than I ever did with any of the residents.

But, I won the day.

At what personal cost, though? I suffered threats from the IRA for not housing the families of their supporters. I became addicted to Valium. I became a worry to my wife and family. I was living on the very edges of my nerve.

It was the only way I knew how to do it. I saw what needed to be done and couldn’t reconcile myself to any ‘softly, softly’ approach even if I was capable of such a tactic. I was all guns blazing and no compromises. My poem Tribal Markings puts it thus;

No regrets about throwing
Cut-throat razors in the air,
And catching them in my teeth,
Such has been my life-long remedy
For the itch of boredom.

True, the risk is there
To miss, just that once,
And I would have minutes to reflect.
But better bleeding swiftly
As the result of error
Than plodding the safety road
Where the grass is the same colour
On both sides of the dry-stone dyke.

I have the tribal markings
Denoting my creed;
A notch on cheek, and jowl
When I haven't got it quite right,
Where the blade has missed the throat,
But has left its impression
Nonetheless.

We all became human beings in ‘the Unit’. From being down-graded and oppressed, the residents became the focus of our kindly and thoughtful attention. The staff became motivated by ways of making the unit a more comfortable and dignified place for both themselves and the residents. Gone was authoritarianism, and in like a cooling breeze came egalitarianism.

We took in Agnes as a single woman. We didn’t usually do this being orientated toward families, but Agnes was in such a bad way that we decided to make an exception. She was clothed in a long coat and had a ‘tea-cozy’ hat firmly jammed on her head. She smelled pretty bad. We tried to coax her to have a bath but at first, she resisted. Even with her hat jammed on, we could discern what appeared to be a bad burn running down the side of her skull. Eventually, and by her own volition, she agreed to have a bath. Two of our female workers helped her do this but had tremendous difficulty removing the headwear. By careful cutting, they managed to remove it, and what was revealed was rather shocking. She appeared to be wearing a skull-cap, but on further examination by the staff and a doctor, this ‘skull-cap’ was made of no known fabric but was, in fact, Agnes’s hair congealed with an infinitesimal matting of lice. She must have been ‘wearing’ this for months, maybe years.

We had the doctor shave her head and provided her with a new tea-cozy hat to hide her baldness until her hair grew back.

Daily life in the Foresthall Family Care Unit was a parade of incidents, events and sharp experiences. 

Nothing ever seemed ordinary: everything seemed new.

 A Scandal on the Grandest Scale: Money, Sex and the Abuse of the Vulnerable

Knowledge is a dangerous thing they say and they’re right. Especially when it’s knowledge about one’s colleagues that implicates them in scandal and corruption. Being wedded to the truth does not always involve having the easiest life. I knew stuff about staff in the Social Work Department and their relationship with the city’s bed and breakfast landlords. Sex and money were at the bottom of it. 

Extortionate rents charged by bed and breakfast proprietors, sexual favours demanded of vulnerable mothers, a blind-eye by the authorities in return for who-knows-what. Back-handers and blowjobs! Now that I was de facto chief of Homeless Families Social Work for Glasgow I quickly became privy to what was going on. I had my moles too – only they were on the side of righteousness. I spoke to some high up people but got nowhere. Eventually, I stated my intention to take it to the press and was interviewed by Scottish Television.

The interview was never shown.

One night in a pub, popular with Social Workers in the centre of Glasgow, I was approached by a very shady character indeed. His message was clear and I had no option but to drop the matter. He said that “certain people” would get “quite heavy” if I “interfered”!

It was all to come out later anyway. The whole scandal was eventually exposed.

By this time I was working in London.

The Slightly Lesser Scandal of the Gauguin Print



My first week in my new office after weeks being seated at a radiator (I knew being the first Social Worker assigned to a Housing Department was not going to be a popular appointment but being forced to pile one’s stuff next to a redundant storage heater one was forced to use as one’s desk was taking it a bit far). They didn’t appear to know I was coming, no-one, apparently had warned them about this radical chap who had moved down from Glasgow to take charge of the Homeless Families department. It seemed to me that they were taking the piss; putting me in my place from the off. Some visionary had had the bright idea to form a link between social work and housing, but the housing side of things sure weren't welcoming it, and whoever had chosen to employ me was lax to say the least in smoothing the way for me.

At any rate, now I was in my new office and I wanted to make it my own little bastion from the enemies without and, no doubt, within.

No Housing Department had ever had a social worker attached to it before. They had operated a purely points system before and had never had been faced with the notion of deserving cases or prioritising in any way that reflected the reality of the society around them.

In general, they resented the intrusion and the potential alteration of their way of working and thinking.

People don’t generally like change.

It was my job to change things.

The first battle was on unexpected terrain.

First bit of décor I put up in my new office, once finally assigned was an Athena print of Gauguin’s Two Tahitian Women. This was to cause an almighty stink. A lady employee, a Guides-mistress no less from the Lettings Section instantly objected to it; she could see it through the window of my office, bare-breasts and all. I could at this stage have taken it down, or moved it where she couldn’t see it, but, maybe it was because I had been mucked about with the radiator and all, or maybe I just thought she was a silly bitch, I decided to keep it where it was. Diplomatic envoys came asking for compromise but I re-buffed them all. This is a work of art, not pornography I said, I am doing nothing wrong, compromise would suggest I was. It hangs in The Louvre, for Christ’s sake, and some little pipsqueak’s had decided it wasn't suitable for the Waltham Forest Housing Department. The Head of Social Services himself summoned me. Me, the new appointee, already causing trouble, but I wouldn't back down.

The radical had arrived.

Funny what stupid people choose to find important when there’s far more pressing stuff going on all around them!

The Tory Chief Medical Officer who once expressed the view to me  “Blacks should be more like the English if they are going to come to this country” labelled me a Communist and campaigned for me to be dismissed from my post.  I responded by agreeing that if being a Communist meant opposing social inequality, and racialism, then “I must indeed be a Communist”.

She had been used (before my arrival) to being able to spout her right-wing views unopposed at the ‘difficult cases’ panel which met two-weekly. Other gems included..

“People can’t actually be homeless if they can afford to refuse whatever we are good enough to offer them” and “If young women are obviously inadequate, they should not be allowed to keep their babies”

She would have fitted in well in Iain Duncan Smith’s DWP (of which I am blissfully unaware here in the spirit world where I am pain-free and happy as a linty).

Her campaign failed.

I went into bat for the Women’s Aid Group in the Borough of Waltham Forest (after their understandably stubborn refusal to even meet with me, a male member of the human tribe, for many months) to help them found a refuge for their beleaguered and picked-upon clients. I felt, when trying to persuade them of my commitment that I was on trial for the violent sins of all men.  I stuck my neck out because I believed in their cause. Their cause became mine and we were successful.

As ever, I was ahead of my time.

By the time I left in November 1983, there were three women’s refuges in operation in Waltham Forest.

Nearly the end

Retirement on medical grounds had been on the cards for some time. I had been diagnosed with the obscure spinal condition Syringomyelia, which was to affect my muscle strength and the feeling in my hands and extremities. My doctor told me to ‘make hay while the sun shines’ as it was a degenerative condition and the word ‘wheelchair’ was used ominously.

If I’m honest, illness was central to my very being throughout my entire life. I learned from my mother that you could use it to control the little world around you. I guess this is what they now call Munchausen’s Syndrome. This doesn’t mean that I wasn’t actually ill. Christ! The twisted tumour in my gut that finally killed me came from decades of knife-edge stress, and though they could never conclusively diagnose any of this – they spoke of ulcers, irritable bowel syndrome; they had me on a diet of charcoal biscuits for a while, I kept Bisodol in business for many years – I guess continual gut-wrenching stress played as big a part as anything pathological.

The Syringomyelia diagnosis was only arrived at after a series of lumbar punctures and tests looking for MS and other scary possible outcomes. They concluded that I had a gap in my spine which was caused as I was being pulled from my mother’s womb.

Maybe she worried about the costs incurred by a new-born and decided to try and hold on to me.

I needed my illnesses like an emotional crutch.

I needed the attention and the control they gave me.

Return to Scotland

Kilmarnock: a big mistake in one sense; a huge triumph for me in another. I did a lot of good work in 

Kilmarnock. I was instrumental in setting up an Advocacy Centre in the town; I set-up the first ‘furniture scheme’ in Scotland; I became a one-man counselling service for men who battered their wives and wanted to stop doing so. I was a tour-de-force. I also became desperate to get out of the place and get back in the game down in London.

Jean was largely miserable. Although, she did pursue a reunion with her father. I supported her in this as much as I could. She seemed to need to square a circle of her own. A daughter loves her father and wants so badly for the father to love her back. She’d tell me of times as a young girl when her father, when sober, was a friendly influence, would hold her hand and walk her to school. She knew that there was little chance of re-creating any such bonding.

Her father, also Robert was still a drinker living in a council flat in Maryhill. You could only visit him in the mornings as his routine dictated that he begin his daily drinking around lunchtime. At this time he would become edgy and that was your cue to depart. Various itinerant friends would arrive for money owed or to arrange loans on the strength of giros or housing payments. Jean was treated politely but she so obviously wasn’t a part of this circle. It was sad in the sense that she didn’t belong there; was being suffered in a way. Maybe auld Boab was pleased to see her again after so many years, though I’m not so sure. I was always waiting for him to ask her for money which I’m sure he did and Jean never told me.

Kilmarnock saw me at my best and at my worst. At my worst howling at the moon in this disused quarry, at my best rousing people into local activism. Take the furniture scheme. Such a simple idea put into action. People needed furniture, people needed to get rid of furniture. All we needed was a wee bit of funding from the council, a van and driver and some folk to shift furniture. Join it all up by making people aware of the service and away we go - instant success. So successful in fact that the local Labour big-wigs didn’t like it one bit. Stepping on their toes you see. They needed to be seen as the saviours of the poor, not that they ever actually done much in that direction. Warned me off. Asked me if I was on an invalidity pension. Implication clear. Fuck off or we’ll grass you up to the Social.

I started up Men’s Groups. Real men with real problems. Drink, violence, marriage break-ups. People think I’m perverse, and maybe I am in a way, but I meant it. I visited the wee schemes – the Onthank’s, the Patna’s, the Irvine’s. I counselled men who hit their wives, who drank themselves to near-oblivion, who felt they had no hope of a way out. I argued with Men’s Group co-ordinators in the brisk tenements of Byers Road, where they charged £300 for ‘Iron Man’ week-ends out in the woods for middle-class wankers to run about and ‘find themselves’. I argued that this was not the way that they had to broaden it out to include all.

Perverse? Of course it was. You wouldn’t have got any of this lot within ten miles of the Onthank Estate, but I had to make the point and was by degrees ‘excluded’ from their little soirees (not always by degrees either, I was once asked to leave due to me being a ‘disruptive influence’, the language of the School Governors they possibly were).

Yes, Kilmarnock was not an unproductive time for me in my quest to practice my socialist ideals at a community level and you can’t move for ‘furniture schemes’ nowadays. My eldest son utilizes them regularly in his welfare rights work in East Lothian.

There is a video in existence which I think Jean still has of a presentation in honour of my part in setting up an Advocacy Service in Kilmarnock. Jean and I travelled up from England for it. Many local political worthies attended along with my brother.

It still exists to this day. I, sadly, do not.

When I died in the hospice, my toes were pointing directly at my head.

Tension. 

Still-strained near death.

Falling off the precipice one last time.

If you had seen me in my pomp, I went where others didn't; the unpopular jobs, jobs that required confrontation required one to put one’s head above the parapet of career security, playing the game, putting one’s interests firmly to the fore.

Never did any of that. Always knife-edge stuff.

Why?

Go ask a psychologist!

Selflessness? Altruism? Ego? Justice? Rebellion?  Political conviction?

All of these things, and maybe more besides….

If you had seen me;
A dancer like dancers,
A singer like singers,
Food like food, and
Good enough to eat.
But I did not know
A time when all of time was mine;
Death was dainty, and kept its distance.
I could waste time, but
Could not love it.
And now when my clock
Is at twenty past ten,
Time fugits fiercely,
Pours down every drain,
Seeps through every doubt.
Time has made an enemy of me.
But, the consolation, if there is one,
Is that, I am not alone.
The big battle scrambles, and scrapes
Through every life,
Enemy of everyone –
A winner, and used to it.
But, never mind, I had my time,
Prime time, in the jargon,
Smile raising, eye sparkling,
Dance stepping time.
If you had seen me!